By Quinn Ford on December 26, 2012 9:21am | Updated on December 26, 2012 2:37pm

Joshua Davis, 18, of the 7200 block of South Bell Avenue, was shot multiple times after getting into a fight with several men, police said.
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WEST ENGLEWOOD — A teen who was friends with slain Englewood rapper Joseph "Lil JoJo" Coleman was shot dead on Christmas Day while wearing a hooded sweatshirt honoring the deceased emcee, his family said Wednesday.

Joshua Davis, 18, of the 7200 block of South Bell Avenue, was shot several times after getting into a fight with a group of men in West Englewood, said Officer Jose Estrada, a police spokesman.

No one was in custody as of Wednesday morning in the shooting, which occurred shortly after 11:30 p.m. in the 2000 block of West 69th Street, police said.

Neighbor Sam Agnew, 83, said he was in bed when he heard four or five shots.

He looked out his front door, saw a man lying in the street directly in front of his house and called police, Agnew said.

According to a law enforcement source, Davis had argued with the men on a bus. After he got off, they chased after him and one of the men unleashed several shots.

"He was killed because he was wearing a hoodie and getting off the bus," said the victim's sister Selina Davis, 24. "He was a great boy. He was only a baby."

Police said it was not clear what article of clothing Davis was wearing at the time of the shooting or what the argument with the men on the bus was about.

Selina Davis said her brother, whose rap name was JayLoud, was wearing a "JoJo" hoodie to honor his best friend, who was killed in September.

On his Twitter account, @JayLoud93 also includes hashtag notations #069 and #BrickSquad, which police say are references to the Brick Squad faction of Gangster Disciples.

Police said Coleman was affiliated with the Brick Squad faction, but it was not clear if Davis was connected to the gang.

Davis' older brother, Ricky Davis, said his brother planned to go to New Orleans in the next few weeks to pursue a rap career. Standing outside the family's house on Wednesday morning, Ricky Davis said he still could not believe his brother was gone.

"That was my little brother. He was like the other half of my heart," Davis said, breaking down. "And he gone now."

His sister stood next to him, looking at the ground.

"Kids killing kids. Mothers burying their kids," Selina Davis said. "How is this humanly possible that we as people cannot get these teenagers under control? I don't get it."

"Who takes someone's life on Christmas?" she asked.

"My little brother," Ricky Davis said. "What type of gift is that?"

Agnew said he's lived on the block for the past 42 years, and when asked if this is the first time someone has been shot there, he laughed.